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My results
Your Linguistic Profile:
55% General American English 30% Yankee 15% Dixie 0% Midwestern 0% Upper Midwestern i don't know how i got dixie either.... and that's pronounced Ee-ther, not Eye-ther... hehehe |
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I believe "save" is used kind of like "except for." It was used a lot in a book I read (which doesn't narrow it down a whole lot). For some reason "To Kill a Mockingbird" comes to mind, but I could be wrong...
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Nope, it was when I worked at The Gap.
"Roquee, you need to save these clothes." People use it around here in that way all of the time. I have to stop and think everytime I hear it.:confused: |
35% General American English
35% Yankee 25% Dixie 5% Upper Midwestern 0% Midwestern hmmm...that would explain ALOT! But more yankee than dixie...my sisters might hurt me.... |
60% General American English
20% Upper Midwestern 15% Yankee 5% Midwestern 0% Dixie Ahh, too many years in NY has the Yankee beating out the Midwestern. :( But the Upper Midwestern is still there! |
75% General American English
15% Upper Midwestern 10% Dixie 0% Midwestern 0% Yankee where's the "californian" percentage?? LIKE TOTALLY! haha! :rolleyes: :p :D |
Your Linguistic Profile:
55% General American English 30% Yankee 15% Dixie 0% Midwestern 0% Upper Midwestern Where did the 15% Dixie come from? :confused: :confused: :confused: |
Your Linguistic Profile:
70% General American English 15% Dixie 10% Upper Midwestern 5% Midwestern 0% Yankee I am wondering where the Dixie comes from also! I did say that I use ya'll-- but what else?! I know I am a complete midwestern girl!! (Other than the ya'll that I picked up from Southerners--including Southern Ohioans over the years!) |
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